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Mar 26, 2013
03/13
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. >> josh brown, top trade? >> i like pfizer. i've been very bullish. another multiyear high in the health sector. this is a name gaining within that sector. i think $30 and higher is literally around the corner. i can't imagine any other pharma name i'd rather be in right now. >> the s&p 500 may be less than two points away, i should say fewer than two points away from its record close. alison dean is sounding the alarm on this rally. she has more than 25 years of investment management. >> alison started at age i just want to make sure. age 1. go ahead, alison. >> you say there's some headwinds that could be facing us. i feel like so many strategists come on and say there's head winds. i started my career around the '87 crash, and so many people were out of the market crash, and so many was chase rallies. post-2000, i'm seeing almost the same behavior post-'87. it's not as bad as people thought. people are getting into the market. i think they're panicking in to some degree. >> when you say pause, what kind of pause are we talking about? a 10% pause? >
. >> josh brown, top trade? >> i like pfizer. i've been very bullish. another multiyear high in the health sector. this is a name gaining within that sector. i think $30 and higher is literally around the corner. i can't imagine any other pharma name i'd rather be in right now. >> the s&p 500 may be less than two points away, i should say fewer than two points away from its record close. alison dean is sounding the alarm on this rally. she has more than 25 years of...
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Mar 21, 2013
03/13
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josh brown? >> well, i guess i'm not sure if i totally disagree with you, but i just wanted to get a better explanation, so your thesis hinges on the fact that right now people think ali baba is only worth 4 or 5 bucks and you're saying it could be 10, and you derive that by looking at other chinese text stocks and the kinds of multiples that they garner, and i know ali baba is one of the best of the groups, so a lot of your thesis then is predicated on, number one, japan staying strong and then, number two, chinese text stock valuations maintaining the -- the levels they have. so you kind of have to be bullish on china then, correct? >> well, look, i think right now the average multiple over there is something for the more mature companies, around 15 times earnings, so it's not any type of stratospheric multiple. we're using comps like ten cents or what not. 20 times earnings for 50% earnings growth over the next three years is not a crazy valuation. it's a .4 peg if you want versus a peer at .7
josh brown? >> well, i guess i'm not sure if i totally disagree with you, but i just wanted to get a better explanation, so your thesis hinges on the fact that right now people think ali baba is only worth 4 or 5 bucks and you're saying it could be 10, and you derive that by looking at other chinese text stocks and the kinds of multiples that they garner, and i know ali baba is one of the best of the groups, so a lot of your thesis then is predicated on, number one, japan staying strong...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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the governor is comparing it to brown versus the board of education and the 1960s. that was a long emergency that demanded immediate action. >> tell that to the millions of people that want to get married and can't. >> governor, what's wrong? let me ask you this. what's wrong with state by state jurisdictions? we have a long history of that in the united states? is again, i go back to the simple argument. states are there. we still respect them. and they have democratic institutions to deal with this question. in new york, for example, in new york, the same-sex marriage, gay marriage won. and people were quite surprised, but they won, and they won through the legislature. so they were properly elected. >> i can explain this if you give me just a second. this is about equal rights under the law, and i think for a long time people thought that homosexuality was an immoral lifestyle, and there are certain people who still do. the overwhelming evidence is that people don't choose to be gay any more than they choose to be black or latino or whatever they may be. to take
the governor is comparing it to brown versus the board of education and the 1960s. that was a long emergency that demanded immediate action. >> tell that to the millions of people that want to get married and can't. >> governor, what's wrong? let me ask you this. what's wrong with state by state jurisdictions? we have a long history of that in the united states? is again, i go back to the simple argument. states are there. we still respect them. and they have democratic institutions...
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Mar 19, 2013
03/13
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josh brown is our baby 90 seconds on the clock. baker, make your case. >> it's a great, great story. it continues to be the way to play the u.s. economy on good growth and also ecommerce, ecommerce growing, also. had a hiccup the last time. it had seven consecutive earnings of increasing growth. it had this big restructure affect going on. so it took a trip over there. we'll recover. oil prices are coming down, so in terms of costs looking good. it's eating the lunch of u.p.s. u.p.s. is trading much higher in terms of valuation. and their operations are 70% more effective. it's a great way to play it. usfx, fedex. >> yeah, no. i disagree with almost all of that. other than -- other than they've made substantial inroads into u.p.s. let me walk you through -- first of all, the trade has been made. stock is up 13% year to date, 25% since thanksgiving, and quite frankly, almost all of the steam in this name is because of cost cutting. there's a limit to how much of that you can do. 25% of the business is international. slowing growth o
josh brown is our baby 90 seconds on the clock. baker, make your case. >> it's a great, great story. it continues to be the way to play the u.s. economy on good growth and also ecommerce, ecommerce growing, also. had a hiccup the last time. it had seven consecutive earnings of increasing growth. it had this big restructure affect going on. so it took a trip over there. we'll recover. oil prices are coming down, so in terms of costs looking good. it's eating the lunch of u.p.s. u.p.s. is...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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i get bombarded by e-mails from bears worldwide, brown bears, black bears, kodiaks, panda bears, even koalas. i didn't have time to figure out if i should take a chance on gonzaga. i picked georgetown. nova is still mine. we'll start with a tweet, thank you for the education, thanks for the laughs, #mad money. harlem shake, too. yeah, we did a good one. ♪ >> hi, jim, how you doing? >> real good, how about you? >> i got a cold. >> i'm sorry. have you tried z-pack. it kills you but it is also good. >> when i say bo you say yah. boo! >> yah! >> boo! >> yah! >> heather that works for you, she's a swell gal. >> she went to the u. this is about business. you can learn a heck of a lot from monopoly. confidentially, i like to turn the board over and stomp out of the room in tears if i lost. so i don't blame them for letting me win. i bring all this up because you know what we're doing this week, we are playing oligopoly. oligopoly the investing game, we can help try to make you real money. not real money, bogus money. >>> before we get to your tweets, time to catch up on some homework. back
i get bombarded by e-mails from bears worldwide, brown bears, black bears, kodiaks, panda bears, even koalas. i didn't have time to figure out if i should take a chance on gonzaga. i picked georgetown. nova is still mine. we'll start with a tweet, thank you for the education, thanks for the laughs, #mad money. harlem shake, too. yeah, we did a good one. ♪ >> hi, jim, how you doing? >> real good, how about you? >> i got a cold. >> i'm sorry. have you tried z-pack. it...
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Mar 19, 2013
03/13
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focused on march madness but i began to get bombarded by emails from bears worldwide -- [ shots fired ] brown bears, kodiaks, even koalas, telling me, this is it, jim, this is the big kahuna that i was being way too glib about the confiscation scheme that would rock my world. i knew not to dismiss the darn cyprus situation. i actually bothered to argue back, silly me. first i offered the standard polite rebuttals that cyprus is a dot on a map, best known for being a favorite island of churchill's as well as for its key role in russian money laundering. i protested that this moronic plan is a one-off because the banking system is a big joke anyway. ♪ >> and while, sure, the heavy handed way the regulators were getting involved seemed wrong to me, it wasn't evident this method would spread violently to the rest of europe. yeah, they shouldn't be taxing these cypriots, just the hot money that came in from russia, and the whole thing is being handled as stupid as our own sequester is being done here, and i wasn't budging from the idea that this story wouldn't cost a major and lasting decline. i
focused on march madness but i began to get bombarded by emails from bears worldwide -- [ shots fired ] brown bears, kodiaks, even koalas, telling me, this is it, jim, this is the big kahuna that i was being way too glib about the confiscation scheme that would rock my world. i knew not to dismiss the darn cyprus situation. i actually bothered to argue back, silly me. first i offered the standard polite rebuttals that cyprus is a dot on a map, best known for being a favorite island of...
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Mar 20, 2013
03/13
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josh brown, in terms of where we are in this bull market, looking to what's working now and what's working less, than at the beginning of this? >> i think the real key here is that a lot of the rally we've had has been driven by an expansion of p.e. multiple. in fact, this is probably one of the biggest p.e. expansion multiple rallies. and so what's come along with that is the fact that we're looking at things like housing, that actually make sentiment better, make people feel better. since the bottom in 2009, we've seen $1.5 trillion in household wealth, come back because of housing. last year, the stock market generated 400,000 new millionaire households. we're back to about 9 million millionaire households. so you can say it's the feds, the fed, the fed. but at the same time, wealth is increasing. and the game right now is to say, what is going to jar investor faith and confidence? what is going to force p.e. multiples to contract? and frankly, it could happen out of the blue, but it hasn't happened yet. and we do have actual improvement in some pretty key areas in the economy, construc
josh brown, in terms of where we are in this bull market, looking to what's working now and what's working less, than at the beginning of this? >> i think the real key here is that a lot of the rally we've had has been driven by an expansion of p.e. multiple. in fact, this is probably one of the biggest p.e. expansion multiple rallies. and so what's come along with that is the fact that we're looking at things like housing, that actually make sentiment better, make people feel better....
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Mar 22, 2013
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which means brown bear in his native language. >> yeah. >> brown bear. let me ask you this. >> we've obviously had a pretty good open here. as i can see, the only dow stock negative is coca cola and that is probably on reacting to this report of peltz. >> so peltz comes in and he blows out sales and takes share of coke so therefore we should sell coke? what the heck. >> there's a reason why pepsi changed the 20-ounce bottle design so it would standout on the shelves and it's a new contoured bottom with a different shaped bottle so it's easier to grip. >> what is the number one soft drink in india? >> what is it in india? >> dew. >> mountain dew. do the dew. it's electric over there. >> i should have known that. i was there recently. i didn't have any dew. >> a morning dew. >> on thursdays i have a mountain dew. >> you're talking to the ceo of pepsi, of course, you said that. >> i told her i'm having my weekly morning mountain dew. she said why don't you have a mountain dew every day? i said because mountain dew, that's a treat. i'm trying not to have sof
which means brown bear in his native language. >> yeah. >> brown bear. let me ask you this. >> we've obviously had a pretty good open here. as i can see, the only dow stock negative is coca cola and that is probably on reacting to this report of peltz. >> so peltz comes in and he blows out sales and takes share of coke so therefore we should sell coke? what the heck. >> there's a reason why pepsi changed the 20-ounce bottle design so it would standout on the...
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Mar 21, 2013
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well, they come to them, travel over miles and have shown dedication to their browned, service. we see them as emerging markets. >> what's business like in new orleans these days? is it back? >> pockets are back. wendell likes to call it a tale of two cities. there are parts that have returned and other parts that are struggling. the political issues that go along with business here tend to really damper the ability to really accelerate growth here. as we get less a little bit sized. >>. >> these are local regulatory issues. >> we have another story we're opening up now dealing with regulatory matters. it's just bureaucracy, bureaucracy. >> i'm a part of board here. we're talking about startups and people coming to pitch all week long to different venturists. there's a real spirit here and development. it's a yin and yang. >> do you care about obama care? you're the local regulatory issues. let's talk about the national issues we talk a lot about. >> obama care is a little bit to be defined. because of the number of employees, we're directly affected by that. we're still doing o
well, they come to them, travel over miles and have shown dedication to their browned, service. we see them as emerging markets. >> what's business like in new orleans these days? is it back? >> pockets are back. wendell likes to call it a tale of two cities. there are parts that have returned and other parts that are struggling. the political issues that go along with business here tend to really damper the ability to really accelerate growth here. as we get less a little bit...
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Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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and brown brothers hair man. mark, have you been surprised? >> i'm surprised just by the euro's resilience. people were thinking there could be a run on european banks which hasn't taken place. a loss of confidence. but it has been trading in fairly tight trading ranges. it has been resilient this week. italy still without a tpo government. >> how do you position yourself? >> monday is when the ecb said it will cut cypress off without a deal. i think it's best to be patient and wait for things to shake out. i think we have had a relatively strong run to the dollar here at the first quarter. and i think that we should be looking for a bounce in foreign currencies. it's signaled by sterling testing the 1.52 level this morning. i would be looking for them to bounce a little bit. once the cyprus news is passed early in the week. and i might be selling into the foreign currencies, buying the dollar. >> kevin, if we're watching oil price, what's been happening with the dollar, the euro, what is the key for the next thing we should be watching, the n
and brown brothers hair man. mark, have you been surprised? >> i'm surprised just by the euro's resilience. people were thinking there could be a run on european banks which hasn't taken place. a loss of confidence. but it has been trading in fairly tight trading ranges. it has been resilient this week. italy still without a tpo government. >> how do you position yourself? >> monday is when the ecb said it will cut cypress off without a deal. i think it's best to be patient...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 18, 2013
03/13
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mayor brown, has done all of it. and he has paid attention to every detail and i am still catching up to learn, but it is. even to be close to what he has been trying to do and of course, especially this year with the trials and tribulations of i suppose any mayor in their first elected year goes through, you know, i take a lot of things personally and i must always go back and say, willie, did this happen to you? >> and, of course, getting the great advice that is absolutely necessary, because, when you sit in this seat, and you have the enormous responsibilities and you don't have the 30 years of experience that mayor brown did, but you similarly appreciate what it takes to run the city, to ask for help, and now i am getting a lot of free help from willie and i appreciate that. and it is, it really is, something that he has given time and time again with my predecessor nuwsom who leaned a lot on him and i am doing the same thing and if we get things done, it is a lot to do with making sure that we don't make costly
mayor brown, has done all of it. and he has paid attention to every detail and i am still catching up to learn, but it is. even to be close to what he has been trying to do and of course, especially this year with the trials and tribulations of i suppose any mayor in their first elected year goes through, you know, i take a lot of things personally and i must always go back and say, willie, did this happen to you? >> and, of course, getting the great advice that is absolutely necessary,...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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you richard brown. it's good to see you and thank you dr. parkel. that's all i got. i could listen to him talk all day. that was fantastic. >> christina, would you like to come up again? >> thank you. we have a few special thank yous that we want to wrap the ceremony up with. if vernal, elsie and deanna if you can please come up. we would really appreciate it. and so behalf on the mayor's office we would like to say thank you deeply for your contribution for making these services such a success. >> thank you. >> they are beautiful. >> for you. we have certificates of honor on behalf of the mayor's services. we are good at making certificates of honor. >> thank you. >> okay. and thank you to everybody for your contribution, your time and commitment to showing up today. the sponsors, we appreciate your support. now that concludes our ceremony. please enjoy the reception. thank you. (music) >> herb theatre,open rehearsal. listen to the rehearsal. i think it is fun for them, they see our work process, our d
you richard brown. it's good to see you and thank you dr. parkel. that's all i got. i could listen to him talk all day. that was fantastic. >> christina, would you like to come up again? >> thank you. we have a few special thank yous that we want to wrap the ceremony up with. if vernal, elsie and deanna if you can please come up. we would really appreciate it. and so behalf on the mayor's office we would like to say thank you deeply for your contribution for making these services...
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Mar 23, 2013
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. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. on the "newshour" tonight, margaret warner is in amman and updates us on the president's middle east trip, capped by a breakthrough between two key u.s. allies. >> woodruff: then, we turn to chicago, where city officials announced plans to close 54 schools, most in overwhelmingly black neighborhoods. >> now we've got to worry about our kids going to another location. worry about what's going to happen to them going to school. >> brown: hari sreenivasan continues our series on broadband technology with a look at a new digital divide over how high-speed access and mobile devices are being used. >> woodruff: and mark shields and david brooks analyze the week's news. that's all ahead on tonight's "newshour." >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and friends of the newshour. and... >> this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. and by contributions to your pbs station
. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. on the "newshour" tonight, margaret warner is in amman and updates us on the president's middle east trip, capped by a breakthrough between two key u.s. allies. >> woodruff: then, we turn to chicago, where city officials announced plans to close 54 schools, most in overwhelmingly black neighborhoods. >> now we've got to worry about our kids going to another location. worry about what's going to happen to them going to school....
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Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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i'm hari sreenivasan. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. we'll see you online and again here tomorrow evening with mark shields and david brooks, among others. thank you and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> and the william and flora hewlett foundation, working to solve social and environmental problems at home and around the world. >> and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and... >> this program was made possible by the corporation for plic broadcasting. and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
i'm hari sreenivasan. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. we'll see you online and again here tomorrow evening with mark shields and david brooks, among others. thank you and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> and the william and flora hewlett foundation, working to solve social and environmental problems at home and around the world. >> and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and... >> this program...
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Mar 21, 2013
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. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. on the "newshour" tonight, margaret warner is traveling with the president and briefs us on his first trip to israel as head of state. >> ifill: then, we examine the allegations that chemical weapons have been used in the syrian conflict. >> brown: judy woodruff updates the efforts to pass gun control legislation in congress and around the country. >> ifill: ray suarez talks to an emergency room doctor whose new book recounts his return home to work on the frontlines in inner city newark. >> we have an overflux of patients cong ito the emrgen deptmen andif you're using the ambulance system for a non-emergency issue, you are taking away from that person who's not able to breathe. now imagine that was your grandmother, imagine that was your father. >> brown: and hari sreenivasan begins a series of stories on the impact high-speed broadband is making on our lives. tonight, the changing landscape of the entertainment industry. >> ifill: that's all ahead on tonight's "newshour." >> major f
. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. on the "newshour" tonight, margaret warner is traveling with the president and briefs us on his first trip to israel as head of state. >> ifill: then, we examine the allegations that chemical weapons have been used in the syrian conflict. >> brown: judy woodruff updates the efforts to pass gun control legislation in congress and around the country. >> ifill: ray suarez talks to an emergency room doctor whose new book recounts...
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Mar 23, 2013
03/13
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i'm judy woodruff. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. "washington week" can be seen later this evening on most pbs stations. we'll see you online and again here monday evening. have a nice weekend. thank you and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: ♪ ♪ moving our economy for 160 years. bnsf, the engine that connects us. >> and by the bill and melinda gates foundation. dedicated to the idea that all people deserve the chance to live a healthy, productive life. >> and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and... >> this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >>> this is "nightly business report." >> moving higher. stocks finish on an up note. still on track for the best quarter in 15 years. >>> water, water not everywhere. how the on going drought is hitting texas es
i'm judy woodruff. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. "washington week" can be seen later this evening on most pbs stations. we'll see you online and again here monday evening. have a nice weekend. thank you and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: ♪ ♪ moving our economy for 160 years. bnsf, the engine that connects us. >> and by the bill and melinda gates foundation. dedicated to the idea that all people deserve the chance to...
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Mar 19, 2013
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jeffrey brown begins with israel's new government. brown: in jerusalem today, workers literally rolled out the red carpet as part of a final preparations ahead of president obama's trip to the region. at the same time, israel's new coalition government was itself installed. led again by prime minister benjamin netanyahu but including new key players. its formation took weeks of negotiations after netanyahu won re-election in january's parliamentary elections. a victory accompanied by the surprisingly strong second-place finish of yair lapid. today netanyahu had to say about his new government stance on relations with the palestinians. >> with a palestinian partner who is willing to conduct negotiations in good faith, israel will be prepared for historic compromise that will end the conflict with the palestinians forever. >> brown: on one important issue, new jewish settlements in the west bank and east jerusalem, the country's new housing minister said yesterday that building would continue in, quote, accordance with what the governme
jeffrey brown begins with israel's new government. brown: in jerusalem today, workers literally rolled out the red carpet as part of a final preparations ahead of president obama's trip to the region. at the same time, israel's new coalition government was itself installed. led again by prime minister benjamin netanyahu but including new key players. its formation took weeks of negotiations after netanyahu won re-election in january's parliamentary elections. a victory accompanied by the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 21, 2013
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the brown twin sisters have been with us for many decades. mary is here today, she's here in celebration and memory of her sister as we all are and we want to take this opportunity to use the arbor day to have a cedar tree, a tree that will grow taller than mary or i. it will grow to be a hundred feet tall. it will be a tree that will be celebrated here in san francisco for generations to come and we thought it would be not only appropriate, but we thought it would be our honor by planting this tree in recognition of vivian and her wonderful contributions to our city. and we are especially blessed with maryann honoring us with her presence. it's not that easy for her to get around these days but she has and continues to be part of an incredible twin sisters. but now she's also missing vivian as much as we are and we felt this would be a proper way to create a celebratory atmosphere on how we miss vivian, how much she meant to us and take this opportunity for arbor day to plant this tree in her name. how is that, maryann for a great celebratio
the brown twin sisters have been with us for many decades. mary is here today, she's here in celebration and memory of her sister as we all are and we want to take this opportunity to use the arbor day to have a cedar tree, a tree that will grow taller than mary or i. it will grow to be a hundred feet tall. it will be a tree that will be celebrated here in san francisco for generations to come and we thought it would be not only appropriate, but we thought it would be our honor by planting this...
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Mar 21, 2013
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i'm gwen ifill. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. we'll see you online and again here tomorrow evening. thank you and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: ♪ ♪ moving our economy for 160 years. bnsf, the engine that connects us. >> support also comes from carnegie corporation of new york, a foundation created to do what andrew carnegie called "real and permanent good." celebrating 100 years of philanthropy at carnegie.org. >> and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and... >> this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org report" with tyler matheson. >> no change. the federal reserve leaves interest rates where they are and stocks move higher. >> coming up, oracle and fed-ex, two corporates report disappointing earnings. >> and hot houses. more good news on housin
i'm gwen ifill. >> brown: and i'm jeffrey brown. we'll see you online and again here tomorrow evening. thank you and good night. >> major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: ♪ ♪ moving our economy for 160 years. bnsf, the engine that connects us. >> support also comes from carnegie corporation of new york, a foundation created to do what andrew carnegie called "real and permanent good." celebrating 100 years of philanthropy at carnegie.org....
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Mar 26, 2013
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jeffrey brown has our book conversation. >> brown: they begin as often grisly tales of murder, the stuff of the tabloids and nightly news, but some of these crime stories end up in the supreme court, part of a continuing and evolving debate in this country about the death penalty, its methods, its effectiveness, its morality. a new book explores this history. it's titled "murder at the supreme court: lethal crimes and landmark cases." its authors are veteran journalists martin clancy and tim o'brien. the title soundsike an agatha christie mystery but you're after something quite serious. why, martin, were you... why a book on murder, the law and a supreme court? >> because the crimes intrigued us. i mean, the cases legally are very interesting and tim can speak to that. but as reporters we were both intrigued by the stories behind those crimes. i mean there are human beings, victims, perpetrators, families. we take you literally from the scene of the crime to the court. >> brown: and the stories become law at a local level and then you're telling us about how they bubble up into the supr
jeffrey brown has our book conversation. >> brown: they begin as often grisly tales of murder, the stuff of the tabloids and nightly news, but some of these crime stories end up in the supreme court, part of a continuing and evolving debate in this country about the death penalty, its methods, its effectiveness, its morality. a new book explores this history. it's titled "murder at the supreme court: lethal crimes and landmark cases." its authors are veteran journalists martin...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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this song we're going to do is an air called the brown-haired girl. when i was recording, when i was fortunate to be able to record bridge across the blue, i was telling them i got this air, i got it off the chieftan's album, i'm going to do it on the electric base. he looked at me and said, you're nuts. people are going to go crazy but if you can do it, i'll help you. he gave me this book of airs and went, figure it out, figure it out. it never quite jelled on the base but when hillary called today, i started to think more about the cedar flute. i said, i wonder if this
this song we're going to do is an air called the brown-haired girl. when i was recording, when i was fortunate to be able to record bridge across the blue, i was telling them i got this air, i got it off the chieftan's album, i'm going to do it on the electric base. he looked at me and said, you're nuts. people are going to go crazy but if you can do it, i'll help you. he gave me this book of airs and went, figure it out, figure it out. it never quite jelled on the base but when hillary called...
97
97
Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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KICU
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we saw sweet brown got a commercial deal. i think the lady saw the cameras and i am going to do the best sweet brown. >> she probably is like this and spiced it up a notch or two for the cameras. >> man, those was big. >> who do you think is better, sweet brown -- >> ain't nobody got time for that. >> or michelle clark? head to the facebook page and let us know. kapooya. >>> if you ever wonder what it would be like if people acted like animals, i have a solution for you. this video, our friend from pleated jeans, a popular blogger and all of these other places, of course, dogs love tennis ball and sees vacuum cleaner. how many people see flies up against the door doing that? >> stupid but funny. >> exactly stupid and funny. rex trying to get a coat with the short arms. >> hola. good day, mate. >> the accents are on point. >> so gross looking. >> they are gross looking and they're gross. >> america. >> i like how the flamingo is trying to make dates. >> come here often? >> if you're a shark you get your own sound track. >> i c
we saw sweet brown got a commercial deal. i think the lady saw the cameras and i am going to do the best sweet brown. >> she probably is like this and spiced it up a notch or two for the cameras. >> man, those was big. >> who do you think is better, sweet brown -- >> ain't nobody got time for that. >> or michelle clark? head to the facebook page and let us know. kapooya. >>> if you ever wonder what it would be like if people acted like animals, i have a...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
48
48
Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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SFGTV2
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amos brown, dr. honeycut, and all of you to look at our public housing and where do we see it going from here, and look into rethinking public housing so that it will be accessible for all people of all ethnicities of all races so that we all have dignity in where we live and what our future looks like. and, so, i look forward to working with all of you along with supervisor breed and cohen in looking at this effort. i have the honor today to introduce mayor ed lee who has made equality the cornerstone of his career. as a civil rights lawyer, he sued the housing authority to improve the standards of living for public housing tenants. and he also sued the fire department so women and people of color could get equal opportunity. as the director of this city's human rights commission, he expanded contracting opportunities for women and people of color. and today as mayor, he makes sure our city government reflects the diversity of this great city. on
amos brown, dr. honeycut, and all of you to look at our public housing and where do we see it going from here, and look into rethinking public housing so that it will be accessible for all people of all ethnicities of all races so that we all have dignity in where we live and what our future looks like. and, so, i look forward to working with all of you along with supervisor breed and cohen in looking at this effort. i have the honor today to introduce mayor ed lee who has made equality the...